To read the texts click on the texts: Rev11:19; 12:1-6,10; 1 Cor15:20-26; Lk1:39-56
Today we celebrate two
significant and related events. These are The Assumption of our Blessed Mother
and Independence Day. Both are celebrated on the same date: August 15.
The reason why these
events are related is because they are both about Freedom. Independence is
celebrated as freedom from foreign rule and domination to self-rule and
governance and the Assumption may be seen as a freedom from this limited and
incomplete life to the bliss of eternal and perpetual life.
The verses which make up
the Gospel text of today are commonly known as “The Magnificat” or Mary’s hymn
of praise. It seems to have been modelled on the prayer of Samuel’s mother,
Hannah, in 1 Sam 2:1-10 and contains many Old Testament concepts and phrases.
It communicates a picture of Mary as someone quite steeped in scripture. It
reveals God primarily as a God of the poor. God is the one who will vindicate
the poor by removing the rich and mighty from their positions and raising the
lowly.
The hymn may be seen to
be divided into four parts. The first part consists of praise to God for what
he has done in and for Mary; the second part speaks of God’s power, holiness
and mercy; the third part shows God acting as a Sovereign in reversing social
conditions in favor of the poor and downtrodden; and the fourth and final part
recalls God’s mercy and promises to Israel.
The hymn speaks of the
effects of the Lord’s coming for all of God’s people. It begins on a note of
salvation as Mary acknowledges her dependence on God. It was the grace of God
that sustained and brought her to the position in which she finds herself. She
has not achieved anything on her own, it is all a gift of God and thus, Mary
acknowledges her humble state, referring to herself as God’s servant. She is to
be called “blessed’ because God, in his mercy and goodness, had raised her to
this level.
God has shown this mercy
and goodness to the poor by showing the strength of his arm, by scattering the
proud, and deposing the powerful. The poor, on the other hand, have been
raised, and the hungry have been filled. God remembers not only those of old but
also the present generation. He is a God not only of the past, but also a God
of the present, the now.
The stress on God as a
God primarily of the poor stands out in Mary’s hymn of praise. In a world where
the rich seem to be getting richer and the poor, poorer, one wonders whether
the Magnificat is a hymn that can make sense to the poor, to those of low degree.
Yet, it is important to remember that God’s ways are not our ways and so, the
poor must, in confidence, sing this song as their song. The confidence with
which Mary sings this song runs through the entire hymn. She uses past tense to
denote God’s future actions, thus expressing that God will indeed accomplish
his will, and the poor will be vindicated. What is important for the poor to
realize is that they, like Mary, need to continue to open themselves to all
that God wants to do in them. They need to continue to acknowledge their
dependence on God by doing all that is required of them and then, leaving the
rest in his capable and strong hands.
Even as we do celebrate
these events, we need to ask ourselves serious questions both as Indians and
Christians. Can we be really free when caste distinctions result in murder and
rape? Can we be really free when freedom to speak the truth is met with physical
violence and threat to life? Can we be
free when the incidence of female foeticide is so high in our country and where
in many places the girl child is seen as a liability and burden rather than a
blessing? Can we be really free when we are so intent on destroying our natural
resources for selfish ends and then have to wonder whether we will have enough
rain to see us through the year? Can we call ourselves Christians when we will
not do anything about these atrocities and continue with our lives as if it
does not concern us?
Are we really free? Are
we truly Christian?
Let the celebrations of
Independence Day and the Assumption of our Blessed Mother be wake-up calls for
us to rouse ourselves from our slumber and do something tangible to right the
wrongs.
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